The contiguous tracts in Avery County contain a portion of Roaring Creek and its tributaries as well as undeveloped, forested land that adjoins Pisgah National Forest.

“It is simply magical,” said Roan Stewardship Director Marquette Crockett, referring Roaring Creek in the Highlands of Roan. “If I were a Hellbender, this is the stream I would want to live in.”

Because of the exceptional water resources, SAHC was awarded a N.C. Clean Water Management Trust Fund grant to purchase the land.

The SAHC purchased the land that includes four adjoining parcels owned by several different landowners for $765,000.

The property includes headwater streams of Upper Roaring Creek, a high-quality native brook trout stream according to the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission.

SAHC’s acquisition will protect water quality and aquatic habitats of the Nolichucky/Cane/Toe Rivers Conservation Area, which includes at-risk aquatic species, like the Eastern Hellbender, and Federally Endangered species, including the Appalachian Elktoe mussel.

“This project was essentially about the water and the watershed — a high priority for conservation on a big scale,” Crockett said.

SAHC’s Roaring Creek land acquisition will protect water quality and aquatic habitats for species such as salamanders.(Photo: Courtesy of SAHC)

Conservation of the mountainous land also protects habitat for birds and other animals as well as scenic views. Rising to an upper elevation of 4,700 feet, the forested acreage can be seen from public recreation areas in the Roan, including the Appalachian National Scenic Trail and Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail.

Approximately one third of the land lies within the Audubon Society’s Roan Mountain Important Bird Area. According to Audubon, the Roan IBA is one of North Carolina’s most important sites for Northern Saw-whet Owls and one of the most significant sites in the southern Appalachians for Magnolia Warbler.

The land also offers connection to vestiges of history and local mountain culture. SAHC purchased the property from descendants of Jerry Hughes, who moved into the valley in the late 1800s. Reportedly, Jerry Hughes named the stream “Roaring Creek” because it was so noisy.

“The land has been in my family close to 100 years,” said one of the landowners, Chris Hughes.

“I believed that the SAHC would be a good route for us to go, and would preserve what to me is a sacred mountain for future generations long after we all are dust. This is my heritage, it is in my very genetic code, and no one can possibly know how much this place means to me," he said.

The 142-acre acquisition builds upon SAHC’s conservation work across the Roaring Creek Valley and Roan Highlands. Over the past several decades, SAHC and its partners have worked to conserve tens of thousands of acres in this area.